same, both divers and the man at the controls loved the thrill of adventure and the rush of adrenaline pumping through their veins.
The two divers had seen graphs depicting the depth, putting New York’s Empire State building on the bottom for comparison alongside Paris’ Eiffel Tower and Toronto’s CN Tower—all dwarfed to the size of a needle. It was a miracle that Robert Ballard had ever found
The exterior lights flickered, came back on and held, causing the men to gasp as a swarm of krill suddenly engulfed the sub. The swarm had to number in the trillions, the cloud a thick mask blotting out all else.
“Damn, it’s like a white out in the Ukraine!” shouted Ryne, who’d spent some time there.
Horst nodded. “Like a million diamonds blinking down on—” Caught in mid-sentence, the implosion of Blitzmariner instantly killed the three men aboard, the two German divers and George Fleet, the Netherlands-born salvage operator who was at the controls. It happened so fast, they did not have time to see or even feel their own deaths.
Above on radar the men of Victory realized that the submarine had slammed into
At the surface, everyone aboard the
Where there was krill, there were whales gorging themselves.
Fleet, ironically the same name as the man who’d first spotted the iceberg that
Chapter Two
On the day after Adolf Hitler had been aboard
Erwin’s thoughts were interrupted by the sound of a hatchway opening and the approach of an officer’s boots over the metal catwalk. Heinrich Dobberhagen joined him at the starboard side of the ship near the bridge, begging for a smoke.
“They’re absolutely black,” Erwin warned, shaking a single cigarette from its pack, handing it to Dobberhagen, and lighting it for the seaman.
“Are you off duty?”
“What do you think?”
The sound of laughter between them wafted across the water, but it was quickly drowned out by
“So peaceful aboard at night here; did I catch you looking out over the sea?” asked Dobberhagen.
“I love the being at sea. Can’t stand all the time we spend in port, especially that town we just left.” Erwin took a deep drag on his cigarette and shook his head. “Thought I’d go out of my mind; I was that bored.”
“At least you had the engines to tend to. That bastard Hessman had me on 12-hour shift.”
“Painting the camouflage, I saw. It’s not right that a junior officer should be put on such duty. Why does he have it in for you?”
“He’s an ass, and I guess he knows that I know he’s an ass.”
“Ahhh, yes,that would definitely make you fair game, but at least now you get to play with the Marconi.” Dobberhagen was one of several radiomen who rotated in the nearby radio room.
“We all sent off messages to home. Me, I sent one—just one—to my girlfriend, Greta.”
“And I’m guessing you were the one caught?”
“Yes, afraid so. How ’bout you? Did you get a message off?”
“Yeah, sure,” Erwin lied. He had no one to send a message to, but Dobberhagen, who lived up to his profession as communicator, would have it all over the ship if he told him he had no one back home. His grandfather had died in ’38, and his mother had contracted a horrible disease that took her far too quickly—a brain cancer. She died pleading for her husband to end her life. She attempted several suicides until she was successful. She left a note asking that she be cremated and her ashes spread over the ocean, but his father, in the end, could not grant such a wish, and she was buried at the cemetery beside the church in the meadow near their home. Erwin was only glad that she was now out of pain and together with her parents in eternity, buried alongside them. Meanwhile, his father was in a cell in Berlin, placed there by the damnable SS, suspected of sedition.
Part of the old home’s tree-studded acreage had been sold to pay off a series of bad debts, the last being his mother’s funeral costs. Next Erwin had lost a good portion of the family estate to the Nazi Party, confiscated ‘for the good of the Third Reich’, but more so due to his father’s politics. In recent years, much of the Hulsing family estate had been turned into a Hitler Youth camp where young boys and girls were ‘properly raised’ in the understanding of the Nazi Party. Many such camps were popping up all over Germany—the children being taken from their parents and placed on farms and fed a daily dose of propaganda. Erwin had thought it wrong then, and his beliefs hadn’t changed since. By this time, many of the boys who had been raised in the Hitler Youth movement were now enlisted in Hitler’s land and naval forces.
“Did you see the size of that box of oranges that Herr Hitler brought to the Admiral?” asked Dobberhagen in a near whisper. “Imagine it, getting a present like that from our Fuhrer.”
“Yeah, I saw it. Hell, everyone of consequence saw it. We all saw the damn oranges, but don’t expect any to trickle down to you, Dobberhagen.”
“I think we have oranges in the galley, just not like those; I mean given to you from—”
“I get it, der Fuhrer, der Fuhrer—some special oranges. Maybe he irrigated them personally with his own piss.”
“Watch that sarcastic tongue, sir; it could get you into trouble.”
“Oranges are oranges.”
“I just thought maybe they’re from America… from the place they call Florida.”
Erwin clammed up, not wishing to hear more about the bloody oranges when Dobberhagen moved in closer to him and whispered, “Do you suspect something else might just be in the orange crate?”
“I suspect nothing.”